1 / 14

Extrusion

Extrusion. Submitted to: submitted by: Asst. Prof. M.P.Gururajan Koduri Srikrishna (2008AMD2922). Introduction. Joseph Bramah, developer of extrusion process.

Download Presentation

Extrusion

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Extrusion Submitted to: submitted by: Asst. Prof. M.P.Gururajan Koduri Srikrishna (2008AMD2922)

  2. Introduction • Joseph Bramah, developer of extrusion process. • It is a process by which a material is forced to flow through a die, which is shaped to produce the required cross-section. • It is similar to the squeezing action of tooth paste. Courtesy: google images(direct extrusion)

  3. Types of extrusion • Hot extrusion • At elevated temperature • No work hardening • costly • Cold extrusion • At room temperature • Work hardening • Lack of oxidation, good surface finish.

  4. Direct extrusion

  5. Indirect extrusion Courtesy: google images (indirect extrusion)

  6. Indirect extrusion • Advantages: • Reduction of friction • high contianer’s life • billet moves more uniformly. So, less extrusion defects • Disadvantages: • Impurities and defects on surface. • Length and area of extrusion depends on stem.

  7. Hydrostatic extrusion

  8. Extrusion force curves courtesy: wiki Fig: relations between forces applied and ram displacement in various processes

  9. Copper alloys • Composition of copper used is 55 to 65% • As copper content increases, ease of extrusion decreases. • In order to have hot working, Lead content should be low • 600-1000oC • Pressure-690MPa • Tubes of 11cm outer diameter, with thickness of 2mm. • Free cutting brass, hot stamping brass • Manganese bronze alloys has marine applications

  10. Steels • 1100 to1250oC • Dummy preheated to 800 to 900oC • Glass lubrication • Plain carbon steels to high alloyed steels • Tubes of 20m long, diameter of 10mm,20mm.

  11. Aluminium alloy • 300 to600oC • Press- 500 to 6000Tons • Billets of 75mm diameter for small,1100mm diameter for big presses. • A layer of metal remains on the surface after extrusion. • Lubricants- graphite, molybdenum disulphide

  12. Properties of materials • Presence of impurities, gas, dross, etc • Depending on degree of deformation Deformation is greater in outer zones. Therefore, differences in properties at these places. This variation is high, if extrusion ratio is low. • Temperature at which work is carried out. Bismuth is brittle in cast state, but, it can be extruded without difficulty at 40oC

  13. Extrusion defects • Surface cracking • Piping defect • Internal cracking

  14. Thank you

More Related